Title: Ch. 3 Warm-Up
1Ch. 3 Warm-Up
- What property of water allows a water strider to
walk on water? - Contrast adhesion and cohesion. Give an example
of each. - Contrast hydrophobic and hydrophilic substances.
Give an example of each.
2Chapter 3
- Water and the Fitness of the Environment
3You Must Know
- The importance of hydrogen bonding to the
properties of water. - Four unique properties of water, and how each
contributes to life on Earth. - How to interpret the pH scale.
- The importance of buffers in biological systems.
41. Polarity of H2O
- O- will bond with H on a different molecule of
H2O hydrogen bond - H2O can form up to 4 bonds
52. Properties of H2O
- Cohesion H-bonding between like molecules
- Surface Tension measure of how difficult it is
to break or stretch surface of liquid
62. Properties of H2O
- Adhesion bonding between unlike molecules
- Adhesion of H2O to vessel walls counters ? pull
of gravity
72. Properties of H2O
- C. Transpiration movement of H2O up plants
- H2O clings to each other by cohesion cling to
xylem tubes by adhesion
83. Moderation of temperature
- Heat Total amount of KE in system
- Temperature measure intensity of heat due to
average KE of molecules - Which has higher temp?
- More heat?
93. Moderation of temperature
- Waters high specific heat
- Change temp less when absorbs/loses heat
- Large bodies of water absorb and store more heat
? warmer coastal areas - Create stable marine/land environment
- Humans 65 H2O ? stable temp, resist temp.
change
103. Moderation of temperature
- Evaporative Cooling
- Water has high heat of vaporization
- Molecules with greatest KE leave as gas
- Stable temp in lakes ponds
- Cool plants
- Human sweat
113. Moderation of temperature
- Insulation by ice less dense, floating ice
insulates liquid H2O below - Life exists under frozen surface (ponds, lakes,
oceans) - Ice solid habitat (polar bears)
124. Solvent of life
- Solution liquid, homogeneous mixture of 2
substances - Solvent dissolving agent (liquid)
- Solute dissolved substance
- Water versatile solvent
134. Solvent of life
Hydrophilic Hydrophobic
Affinity for H2O Repel H2O
Polar, ions Nonpolar
Cellulose, sugar, salt Oils, lipids
Blood Cell membrane
14Figure 3.8 A water-soluble protein
155. Acids and Bases
- H2O H OH-
- (gains proton) H H2O ? H3O (hydronium ion)
- (loses proton) H2O H ? OH- (hydroxide ion)
165. Acids and Bases
- Acid increases H concentration (HCl)
- Base reduces H concentration (NaOH)
- Most biological fluids are pH 6-8
pH Scale
17Figure 3.10 The pH scale and pH values of some
aqueous solutions
18Calculating pH
- HOH- 10-14
- If H 10-6 M, then OH- 10-8
- pH -log H
- If H 10-2
- -log 10-2 -(-2) 2
- Therefore, pH 2
- If OH- 10-10
- H 10-4
- -log 10-4 -(-4) 4
- Therefore, pH 4
195. Acids and Bases
- Buffers minimize changes in concentration of H
and OH- in a solution (weak acids and bases) - Buffers keep blood at pH 7.4
- If blood drops to 7 or up to 7.8, then death
- Carbonic Acid Bicarbonate System important
buffers in blood plasma - H2CO3 (carbonic acid) ? HCO3- (bicarbonate) H
20Ocean acidification threatens coral reef
ecosystems
CO2 mixed with seawater ? Carbonic acid (lowers
ocean pH)
21The effects of acid precipitation on a forest
22H2O Property Chemical Explanation Examples of Benefits to Life
Cohesion polar H-bond like-like ?gravity plants, trees
Adhesion H-bond unlike-unlike plants? xylem blood?veins
Surface Tension diff. in stretch break surface H-bond bugs?water
Specific Heat Absorbs retains E H-bond ocean?mod temp ?protect marine life
Evaporation liquid?gas KE Cooling Homeostasis
Universal Substance Polarity?ionic H-bond Good dissolver solvent